FIU graduates do well by doing good

While traveling in Asia, Ari Sernik volunteered at a Cambodian orphanage for HIV-positive children. After returning home he devised a way to continue to help: He organized a charity auction of the children’s art work. That experience led him to create Ten-Yad (“Give a Hand” in Hebrew), designed to help children’s charities sell handicrafts.

Like Sernik, several members of the FIU graduating class of 2017 did not wait to receive their degrees before they started to make a difference in the world. In 2014, Guy F. Jean Baptiste cofounded the Cercle des Volontaires por Education et le Progres d’Haiti (CVEPH), an organization that provides education and food to children in Haiti. Andrea Saladrigas turned her talent for sales and her entrepreneurial drive into Master Honey, a non-profit that places beehives with low-income women, teaches them business and hive maintenance skills, and buys the honey they produce.

Sernik, Baptiste, and Saladrigas will be recognized as Worlds Ahead Graduates when they receive their bachelor’s degrees from the FIU College of Business at 2 p.m. on Saturday, April 29, 2017, during the first of 11 graduation ceremonies over five days that will turn 5,099 students into FIU alumni. All ceremonies will take place at the Ocean Bank Convocation Center, 12000 SW 8th Street in West Miami-Dade.

“The true mark of professional success is to do well by doing good,” said FIU President Mark B. Rosenberg. “These students are taking responsibility and serve as an inspiration to others about what is possible with passion, knowhow and perseverance.”

Vanessa Morales is a shining example of what is possible with focus and hard work. As the child of a dysfunctional family, she spent years moving around and staying with friends and relatives. One day she started sleeping in her car, which she parked near the recreation center on campus, so she could take a shower in the morning before going to class. A police officer found her and put her in touch with Fostering Panther Pride, a program for former foster children and homeless students. Morales moved into student housing and finished her degree in elementary education in the School of Education and Human Development, part of the College of Arts, Sciences & Education. She will accept one of three job offers, but one day she plans to open a learning center for at-risk and foster youth. Morales graduates at 3 p.m. on Monday, May 1.

At 20, Michael Perez has been accepted to medical school and plans to become a neurosurgeon involved in clinical research, education, and urban health initiatives. While working on his bachelor’s degrees in biological sciences and chemistry in the College of Arts, Sciences & Education at FIU, Perez had a head start on his life goals: He was a leader in his Honors College club’s first medical brigade to the Dominican Republic, where they delivered more than 500 pounds of medical supplies. He taught organic chemistry lab and was a resident assistant in the PantherLIFE program for students with intellectual disabilities. Perez graduates at 10 a.m. on Tuesday, May 2.

Several members of the community will be recognized during the commencement ceremonies:

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About FIU Foundation, Inc.

The Florida International University Foundation, Inc. (FIU Foundation) was established in 1969 to encourage, solicit, receive and administer gifts for scientific, educational and charitable purposes for the advancement of Florida International University and its objectives. (more +)

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